spencer 0 #1 February 4, 2004 What can be used to export from premiere to a DVD burner. As I use export to tape at present. Also would a DVD recorder be a better long term tool than a DVD burner?. Thanks eddie. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Deuce 1 #2 February 4, 2004 I could never get my computer to burn a disc of any length. I went with a DVD recorder and I have it connected to my PC via firewire. Then I "Print to tape" right onto the DVD recorder. It's working great. JP Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
spencer 0 #3 February 4, 2004 What DVD recorder did you go for Deuce?, some DVD disc's can be played on any player, a different region ie another part of the world and some DVD players can decode a disc from different regions. If I brought a DVD of my jump from you or your DZ would I be able to play it in another part of the world. Eddie Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
PhreeZone 20 #4 February 4, 2004 Duece recorded it in NTSC so it would'nt play on your PAL DVD player. Multiregion is easy to do, just turn off the region option in the burn.Yesterday is history And tomorrow is a mystery Parachutemanuals.com Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Deuce 1 #5 February 5, 2004 Actually, I think I can recode my timeline in PAL and just burn a copy in that format. We'll see when I get my "real" duplicator later this week. My DVD recorder is a +R Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
spencer 0 #6 February 5, 2004 what make and model? Sony ect. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
vdschoor 0 #7 February 5, 2004 QuoteDuece recorded it in NTSC so it would'nt play on your PAL DVD player. Multiregion is easy to do, just turn off the region option in the burn. That might not be true, as far as I know the only thing that causes a DVD not to play, is the region code. Deuce's DVD is region free so it does not have that problem. Even if the footage is in NTSC it should play fine on most newer TV's Iwan Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Deuce 1 #8 February 5, 2004 Quotewhat make and model? Sony ect. It's a Philips DVDR75. $439. The guy who owns our DZ video concession uses one, and I don't think I'll use it quite that hard. Tough environment for electronics too, the hangar. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
spencer 0 #9 February 5, 2004 How long does it take to record a tandem video onto a dvd say a 5-10 min tape. Eddie. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Deuce 1 #10 February 5, 2004 It's a linear system and prints the DVD at the same time the VHS records. The dubber (I love our setup, we have a dedicated dubber) does it in the same time as the VHS process. It might add a minute, just to handle the DVD and then finalize it. There's a minor drop in quality, because the Mini DV is recorded linearly (is that a word?) to VHS, and then the DVD is burned off of that. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
diverds 0 #11 February 5, 2004 You go to VHS and then to DVD? Why would you not go straight to DVD to avoid the quality loss? Am I missing something here? Skydive Radio Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
kallend 2,027 #12 February 5, 2004 QuoteWhat can be used to export from premiere to a DVD burner. As I use export to tape at present. Also would a DVD recorder be a better long term tool than a DVD burner?. Thanks eddie. My Premiere (6.5) allows export to video (.avi) which is then read by my Sony burner using a Roxio package. It also works using the export to Adobe MPEG encoder. Can make an M2P (or is it MP2) file that some burner packages read (Sonic, for example). I've not had any trouble at all.... The only sure way to survive a canopy collision is not to have one. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
spencer 0 #13 February 5, 2004 As Dave said, why would you record from VHS and not straight from DV to premiere to DVD recorder. Eddie. VHS is DEAD Long live the King. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Deuce 1 #14 February 5, 2004 You go to VHS so you can linear edit. It is much faster the way we script our tandems. There is some quality loss, but since we're not using any compression (recording at highest quality) it's not too bad I must say it's much better to do it all digitally, the quality of my miniDV to DVD is outstanding. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
XDV 0 #15 February 5, 2004 we use a panasonic DVD recorder with an hard drive, for our tandem, it's about the same time as doing an edit on vhs, only 2 more minute for closing the DVD, we plug also the VHS on the same field so we can do DVD and VHS in the same tape and also without lossing quality for our DVD Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
diverds 0 #16 February 5, 2004 That's exactly how I was thinking it should be set up. Still happens in real time and no quality loss. Skydive Radio Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
base598mn 0 #17 February 5, 2004 I think that what you would want to do sometime in the future is update your software to Adobe's Video Collection. It comes with Premier Pro and Encore DVD as well as After Effects 6.0 and the new Adobe Audition audio software. The new bundle of software really takes Premier and After Effects capabilties to a whole new level. I just recieved it and the things that you can do with it are amazing. And when you are going to burn to a DVD, Encore will make it easy and allow you to create buttons, first plays, incorporate photoshop layers and a lot more easily to really impress your end user. It makes 6.5 look like a kids program. Highly recommend. The only thing is, you must have the computer for it, 3.0Ghz, 1Gb RAM, vid card hardware excelleration or dual processors, and window XP. So it's a bit off topic but my point is you may want to use and Adobe DVD burning/authoring software tool, AKA Encore. Erich Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites